Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Usa-1 Original Mint License Plate Chevrolet Putting You First Keeps Us First on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Butler, New Jersey, United States

Butler, New Jersey, United States
SUPER MINT ORIGINAL STEEL CHEVROLET ACCESSORY LICENSE PLATE
Country/Region of Manufacture:United States

Up for bid is an all original Chevrolet accessory license plate that was available from Chevrolet dealerships. I worked in our local Chevy dealer then and it was on my '69 Chevelle  company "demo "car which they promptly sold out from " under me" after two weeks use! I grabbed the plate and have had it ever since. This is an "original" steel plate, NOT an aluminum repro, and is in super condition, with only lite wear where the screws went thru the holes. It reads : U-S-A-1 --PUTTING YOU FIRST KEEPS US FIRST. I'm not 100% sure, but I think this is the first one of the U-S-A--1 dealer plates. Really a great piece!

Post-World War II Japanese tin toys on display in New York

Fri, 14 Aug 2009

During the rebuilding of Japan after World War II, a Japanese toy designer took a discarded tin can and molded it into an intricate model car. Just inches in length, it created a phenomenon in the 1940s and '50s in Japan called “buriki.” Buriki is derived from “blik,” which is Dutch for "tin toy." A collection of 70 tin-toy vehicles manufactured in Japan is currently on display at New York's Japan Society Gallery. The exhibit, called “Buriki: Japanese Tin Toys from the Golden Age of the American Automobile, The Yoku Tanaka Collection,” runs until Aug.

Dealer's belief in Porsche led to $5 million store

Tue, 01 Jun 2010

Car dealer Jack Daniels IV is used to seeing the grins on people's faces when they hear his name. And he's OK with it. "People have said, 'It's my favorite drink, so I thought I'd buy a car from you,' " says Daniels, who in April opened the largest Porsche dealership in America.

Video shows voice-to-text is as dangerous as actual texting

Tue, 23 Apr 2013

As we cruise through Texas A&M Transportation Institute Tuesday revealed that voice-to-text apps -- which read text messages aloud and allow users to respond using their voice -- are equally as distracting as manual texting. In the test, TTI had 43 drivers complete various tasks within a closed driving course. The drivers were asked to finish one lap completely free of cell phone use.